2010

Soros Colluding With U.S. State Department To Destabilize Eastern European Governments

March 3, 2017 - San Francisco, CA - PipeLineNews.org – According to numerous reports, most of which are based upon research and court actions taken by Judicial Watch:

“The U.S. government has quietly spent millions of taxpayer dollars to destabilize the democratically elected, center-right government in Macedonia by colluding with leftwing billionaire philanthropist George Soros, records obtained by Judicial Watch show… The cash flows through the State Department and the famously corrupt U.S. Agency of International Development (USAID), which is charged with providing global economic, development and humanitarian assistance. USAID has allocated about $5 million to leftwing Soros groups in Macedonia since 2012, documents show, and at least $9.5 million has been earmarked by the agency to intervene in the Balkan nation’s governmental affairs for 2016-2021. [source, U.S. Gives Soros Groups Millions to Destabilize Macedonia’s Conservative Govt ., Judicial Watch]

As has been the case throughout his career, Soros uses his various foundations to overthrow center-right/traditionalist governments around the world operating through NGOs that he and his pals at USAID handsomely fund.

The groups so funded are almost without exception hard-left/Marxist revolutionary in nature and engage in all manner of violent activity to sow discord in countries which have taken steps to stop the invasion of ME jihadist Muslims who are fleeing the mess that they made…so they can wreck the next country stupid enough to grant these people asylum.

We have been aware of Soros’ operation for a very long time, for example in a 2015 piece [see addendum below] we identified 70 of his allied groups worldwide and that is really only touching the surface as the billionaire convicted felon very cleverly launders money from one group to another so as to hide its original source.

Macedonia is a flashpoint because the government there erected a razor-wire fence to keep rampaging Muslims out of the country, a policy in direct opposition to the open borders that Soros’ and his Brown Shirts want to force on governments that seek to preserve their cultural identities. [note: Macedonia has a particularly rich and proud cultural heritage in that it was the ancestral home of Alexander the Great]

Macedonia and Greece share a border and before the prescriptive action was taken over 10,000 mostly military age Muslim men were streaming through checkpoints that were completely overwhelmed.

Always slow to act, the GOP Congress is starting to make inquiries to the State Dept., to determine the extent of the meddling. Senator Mike Lee [who is getting a deserved reputation as a grandstander] drafted a long letter of inquiry to State. However now with the change of administrations and the State Department in open rebellion against the Trump administration we doubt that it will have much effect.

“I have received credible reports that, over the past few years, the US Mission to Macedonia has actively intervened in the party politics of Macedonia, as well as the shaping of its media environment and civil society, often favoring groups of one political persuasion over another,”

The cause for concern is obvious with former Macedonian PM Nikola Gruevski is claiming that Soros has had a "decisive influence" on his country’s politics:

In the case of Macedonia, the main conduit for the funding transfer appears to have been Ambassador Jess L. Baily, of course a career “diplomat” about whom the Washington Times had this to say:

“It seems clear that Ambassador Baily has broken the rules. He and his staff should be removed - immediately. New Secretary of State Rex W. Tillerson needs to start weeding out Mr. Obama’s appointees in the Balkans and Eastern Europe, where the ground is especially fertile for the Soros Army to wield its malign influence and further the leftist agenda to cause harm and human suffering throughout the region, as we have seen in Sweden, Germany, the U.K. and elsewhere…” [source, L. Todd Wood, Soros Working His Mischief Again In Macedonian Power Struggle ]

With the United States’ left in tumult, much of which is guided by ex-president Obama and funded by Soros now would be the time for the incoming administration to make an example of him, while striking a significant blow against the Marxist street thugs who are feverishly working to destabilize the United States in a manner similar to what is happening in Europe.

As heretofore referenced, regarding the Soros empire, a partial list of his organizations is itemized below. Note #56, Project Syndicate, a lefty news service that provides content to 240 newspapers. This is an example of a single group acting as a force multiplier in the financier’s irregular warfare against the Western democracies. To say that Soros is methodical is to do a disservice to the breathtaking scope of his operation; below, a partial list of OSF’s Donor Partners :

“AIDS and Rights Alliance for Southern Africa for promoting a human rights approach to HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis in Southern Africa

American Civil Liberties Union Foundation for championing the rights of Americans, and the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights Education Fund for its defense of civil rights and civil liberties in the United States

American Councils for International Education for supporting and developing independent educational advising centers in the Caucasus and Central Asia

Arab Fund for Art and Culture for empowering contemporary artists and facilitating cultural exchanges in literature, filmmaking, performing, and visual arts in the Arab region

Association for Civil Rights (Argentina) and Fundación para la Libertad de Prensa (Colombia) for seeking to curtail soft censorship, including government manipulation of advertising to control media coverage, throughout Latin America

Baacha Khan Trust for educational programs that provide underprivileged people in Pakistan with the knowledge, skills, and critical thinking

William J. Brennan Jr. Center for Justice for its intellectual leadership in devising legal approaches to issues of civil liberties and democracy in the United States

The Campaign for Youth Justice for its work to end the U.S. practice of trying, sentencing, and incarcerating children under the age of 18 in the adult criminal justice system, and the National Juvenile Defender Center for its efforts to improve access to counsel and quality of representation for children in juvenile and criminal proceedings nationwide

Center on Budget and Policy Priorities for its expertise on budget and tax policy questions in the United States, and also for its International Budget Project, which promotes budget transparency and accountability in transition countries

Center for Community Change for its efforts to give low-income people a voice in American democracy, and the American Institute for Social Justice for providing staff and leadership training, technical assistance, research, and strategy support on issues relevant to this group

Center for Educational Development BILIM–Central Asia for its work supporting educational advising services in Eurasia and promoting international educational opportunities

Center for Global Development for efforts to reduce global poverty and inequality by assisting the newly democratic Liberian government, the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, and the reform process in Latin America

Center for Public Interest Research for its support of student-directed civic and political engagement programs

Centro Edelstein de Pesquisas Sociais for strengthening democratic governance in Latin America and promoting the region’s voice in international forums

Committee to Protect Journalists and Article 19 for their work defending and upholding freedom of expression

Council of State Governments for providing state legislators and policymakers in the United States the resources to establish effective public policies and government programs, and the Progressive States Network for connecting progressive state legislators around common principles and developing campaigns on these issues

Democracy Coalition Project for working to strengthen the intergovernmental Community of Democracies process as a mechanism for democratic change

Drug Policy Alliance for its promotion of an alternative drug policy in the United States

Earth Island Institute for its work to educate 18- to 35-year-olds in the United States and Canada about the climate crisis

Economic Policy Institute for economic research in the United States to improve the well-being of low-income families and empowering international research institutions

Equal Justice Society for its work to advance racial justice in the United States, with a focus on judicial nominations and limitations on civil rights claims

Eurasian Harm Reduction Network, for their work to ensure access to sterile injection equipment, essential medicines, and discrimination protection for injecting drug users

European Network Against Racism for working to combat racism, xenophobia, anti-Semitism, and Islamophobia in all EU member states

European Roma Rights Center for its defense of the rights of a minority that is severely persecuted in many countries, and the Roma Education Fund for its efforts to close the gap in educational outcomes between Roma and non-Roma populations

European Stability Initiative for its influential analysis of the European integration process in the Balkans

Global Fund for Women for its advocacy on human rights for women around the world

Global Witness for its investigations of the connections between resource exploitation, corruption, the arms trade, and severe abuses of human rights

Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights in Poland for its human rights training efforts in Central Asia and Russia, as well as in Poland

Human Rights Watch for its leadership in protecting civil and political rights worldwide

Institute for International Education for its pioneering effort with the Scholar Rescue Fund, which offers safe haven to endangered scholars around the world

Institute on Medicine as a Profession for promoting professionalism in U.S. medicine

Interights for promoting respect for human rights through strategic litigation in critical areas

International Bridges to Justice for ensuring basic legal rights in China, Vietnam, and Cambodia, and working for long-term change in criminal justice systems

International Center for Transitional Justice for its assistance to transitional countries wishing to pursue accountability for mass atrocity or human rights abuse under previous regimes

International Crisis Group for its research and advocacy in addressing armed conflicts and other crises in international relations

International Step by Step Association for fostering democratic principles and promoting parent and community involvement in early childhood education, especially among minority ethnic and linguistic groups

International Women’s Health Coalition, Center for Reproductive Rights, and Planned Parenthood Federation of America for their work protecting and expanding reproductive health advocacy and services around the world

Justice at Stake Campaign for its efforts to keep the U.S. courts fair and impartial

Margaret Mead Film and Video Festival for presenting international documentaries on diverse and challenging subjects

Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City for helping to reduce poverty in New York City and stabilize neighborhoods affected by the subprime mortgage crisis

Médecins Sans Frontières, AIDS Foundation East-West, Doctors of the World, and Partners in Health for their efforts in addressing crucial public health emergencies that are often connected to abuses of human rights

Media Development Loan Fund and the Southern Africa Media Development Fund for their role in assisting independent media to develop as self-sustaining businesses

Memorial Human Rights Center for monitoring and working to remedy human rights violations in the North Caucuses, particularly in Chechnya and Ingushetia

Mental Disability Rights International and the Mental Disability Advocacy Center Foundation for their protection of the rights of the mentally disabled

National Council for Civil Liberties (Liberty) in the U.K. for promoting of democratic participation, justice, openness, the right to dissent, and respect for diversity

National Senior Citizens Law Center for its research and advocacy on constitutional and statutory issues affecting the aged in America

Network of Institutes and Schools of Public Administration for fostering academic and training programs in public administration and public policy in postsocialist countries

Network on Police Reform in Nigeria (NOPRIN) for promoting civil society involvement in safety and security issues in Nigeria

New America Foundation in the United States for its efforts to oppose privatization of public airways, ensure nuclear security, and foster a new social contract among workers, employers, and the government

Nurcha for helping build hundreds of thousands of low-cost houses in South Africa

Partners Foundation for Local Development in Romania for serving as a regional support center to training institutions on innovative anticorruption approaches

Peace Institute in Slovenia for its efforts to promote open society principles and practices

Penal Reform International for its worldwide efforts to reduce incarceration and protect the rights of prison inmates

Policy Association for Open Society (PASOS) for harnessing the resources of think tanks to promote open society and democracy in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union

Project Vote/Voting for America for registering voters in the United States and analyzing election law

Proteus Fund for its support of organizations working to advance social justice and the common good in the United States

Public Interest Law Initiative for advancing human rights around the world by stimulating public interest advocacy

Public Interest Projects for its U.S. work to strengthen affirmative action, human rights, immigrant’s rights, and nonpartisan civic engagement work

Revenue Watch Institute for its role promoting the responsible management of oil, gas, and mineral resources for the public good

Refugees International for advocating for lifesaving assistance and protection for displaced people

Renace for its work in pretrial detention reform in Mexico

The Sentencing Project for leading efforts in the United States to reduce excessive imprisonment

Southern Center for Human Rights for its work to protect the rights of the poor, people of color, and the disadvantaged in criminal courts and prison systems in the American South, and the Equal Justice Initiative of Alabama for providing legal assistance to disadvantaged people in the region

The Tides Center for its support of forward-thinking activists and organizations;

TIMAP for Justice for its pioneering efforts to provide basic justice services in Sierra Leone

Tiri for its efforts to promote transparency and integrity in government, business, and civil society

Local chapters of Transparency International for their work with Soros foundations on anticorruption measures

TESEV (Turkish Economic and Social Studies Foundation) for contributing to further democratization and better governance in Turkey through policy-oriented research and training

Vera Institute of Justice for its innovative efforts to pursue criminal justice reform programs in such countries as Russia, South Africa, and the United States